Workplace conflict costing SA companies millions

Managing people is not easy, and it is coming under increasing scrutiny. Photo: Pexels

Managing people is not easy, and it is coming under increasing scrutiny. Photo: Pexels

Published Dec 7, 2022

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OPINION: In the complexities of working remotely, COOs and team leaders have a very expensive problem waiting to happen, writes Martin Dippenaar.

The NBA was recently rocked by footage of Golden State Warrior teammates involved in a fistfight during practice. It is certainly not the first time athletes at the highest level have been known to have the pressures of working together getting the better of them.

And it is no different in the workforce, where high-performing individuals are required to collaborate under the pressures of often unrealistic deadlines. Add in the complexities of working remotely, and COOs and team leaders have a very expensive problem waiting to happen.

Managing people is not easy, and it is coming under increasing scrutiny

Global research and consultancy firm Forrester has pegged 2022 as the year executives are “forced to care” about employee experience (EX).

The company says that EX has become fairly mainstream on the leadership agenda, pointing out that the US’ Securities and Exchange Commission has even mandated quarterly and annual reports that include details of how listed companies plan to handle human capital.

These human capital KPIs will ask companies to report on what they are doing to address the attraction, development, and retention of personnel. It also requires a view of the stability of the workforce, such as voluntary and involuntary turnover rates.

This is likely to expand in coming years and Forrester and others see human capital reporting gathering momentum in the same way ESG reporting has.

Conflict has a measurable impact on your business

The repercussions of how companies treat employees, especially as it pertains to hybrid and remote work, have also been thrown into the spotlight, with much being written about the Great Resignation and quiet quitting.

As executives, we should be doing everything we can to ensure we hold onto scarce skills by creating environments where workers can deliver their best.

A big part of an optimal work environment is one that is low in distractions and drama – a work environment that has as little conflict as possible.

Quantifying the cost of disputes is not easy, but the UK public body that helps companies with conciliation and arbitration, Acas, published a report last year in which it estimates that workplace conflict costs UK employers £28.5bn every year. This amounts to an average of just over £1,000 for every employee, every year.

What makes up that cost to companies goes far beyond the lost productivity and missed deadlines. When teams experience conflict they lose focus.

Individuals find it increasingly difficult to work in unsettled environments and companies can spend hundreds of thousands and rands replacing team members that quit as a result of fraught workplaces.

More than just these direct costs, the time and attention required of management to deal with internal conflict quickly stacks up and can have catastrophic consequences for companies.

Early interventions can be achieved with algorithms

Running a growing software development company depends on teams working closely together through development, testing and refining processes.

These teams often face really tough deadlines, and each member of the team has a very specific role but must also be able to jump in to help one another when needed.

Interpersonal relationships are complex at the best of times. For example, in a team of eight, each team member has a direct relationship with every other member. That’s 56 relationships that need to be managed by team leaders and project managers.

In our own business, we saw that it could be an apparently benign issue that can suddenly escalate if not detected and moderated early.

What’s more, the contagion effect can last for months after the incident, poisoning the work environment and, if left unchecked, can lead to poor delivery at best and multiple resignations at worst.

It was this challenge of early detection and intervention that gave us the idea of turning our software development skills to building a system that could help us minimise the fallout of team discord.

By applying an algorithm to our data, the software can give insight into the relationships between team members and how that could impact current projects.

We have found that the software is able to detect points of potential conflict between six weeks to two months before a human would.

We saw that the early intervention slashed staff turnover by 50% in the first year. Considering replacing a developer was costing upwards of R100 000 each time there was a resignation, not to mention the lack of continuity and lost IP, it’s easy to see that early intervention was having a material impact on operations.

*Martin Dippenaar is the chief executive of Global Kinetic.

** The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Independent Media or IOL.

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